Hi everyone, how are you? I moved to Sydney two days ago, and the past week has been pretty intense. Amongst all that, I managed to see a couple of shows that are premiering this week. Last night I went to the Will & Grace premiere at a drag bar – I’d never seen the show before, and I didn’t know anyone. Here’s what I can say: it’s a good throwback sitcom, and Will is my favourite (being a good straight man – comedically – is difficult). I also think David Schwimmer did a great job, and I hope he’s around for at least a few more episodes.

I also saw the All American pilot, which I really enjoyed. It’s based on the life of Spencer Paysinger, an NFL player from central Los Angeles who was recruited to play for Beverly Hills High. Because it’s on Stan, I looked up which network it’s on in the United States, and it’s The CW. This isn’t a bad thing, I watch a lot of CW shows. But there are certain points at which you can tell. The other thing is that people are going to compare this to Friday Night Lights, a fantastic show that for some reason became a comedy in its second season. They’re both about high school football, and while Friday Night Lights does some great work with class divisions in seasons four and five, that’s what this entire show is about. So as long as it sticks to these aspects, and doesn’t lean too much into it’s CW-ness (you’ll see what I mean), I’m going to keep watching.

Speaking of shows that lean too much into their CW-ness, Riverdale is back! I’m hoping that the third season rights the ship a little bit – the first season was one of my favourite shows that year, and I fell off around season two. The thing about Riverdale is that the first season was made in a vacuum – they’d filmed the whole thing before it went on air – and then they had feedback for the second season. Yes, people liked the twists, but in season one they were informed by character, and in the second season it was a twist for the sake of it. I love this show, and I’m looking forward to it coming back. Remember this great moment?

I’m also interested in Trust, which FX has renewed as an anthology series about the Getty family. If you have Foxtel and want a little more Getty content, All the Money in the World is about the same story and was added last week.

The Good Place is back! There’s a lot of stuff happening this week, but that’s the important one. And I think I’m going to have to mute the hashtag on Twitter so I don’t get spoiled by the time it drops on Netflix tonight. I’m also finally going to have the chance to catch up on season 5 of Brooklyn Nine-Nine before it comes back in January. I watched the first episode of the Heathers series the other day, when I thought I would be in Sydney but wasn’t – you can find that story over on Twitter. I have reservations about the show but don’t want to pass judgment after only watching the first episode. I might have a look at some other reviews this afternoon.

I also just queued up the third episode of The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair, and it’s interesting, but Marcus Goldman is such a pretentious douche that it’s difficult to watch. Also he’s pretty willing to defend his mentor who was an adult in some kind of relationship with a 15 year old girl (Patrick Dempsey claims he loved her but nothing happened. This whole thing is icky.) I want to know what happened so I’ll keep watching for now, but I have my hackles up.

I’m looking forward to watching Jane Fonda in Five Acts, and I really need to get onto the French Agatha Christie show. I also have a lot of things that I need to do right now. Until next week!

It’s a quieter week, although there’s a lot happening on SBS. It’s really just the calm before the storm of next week, when Netflix adds season 5 of Brooklyn Nine-Nine and the new season of The Good Place begins. As far as this week goes, I’m really looking forward to Maniac after this week’s Storm of Spoilers podcast (I didn’t listen to the spoiler section. Be nice), and I might watch Paddington 2 this weekend after nearly buying it last week. Happy watching!

Also between Paddington 2 and A Very English Scandal, it’s quite a good week for Ben Whishaw.

This was quite a fun one to write. Some of you may be wondering how I came across Raphael Bob-Waksberg’s description of BoJack Horseman Season 5. To start, I want to say that I’ve never seen the show, and I realise I would probably like it if I saw it. As a result, I didn’t ask for screeners when the Netflix publicist sent out an email for screener requests. I know that this is a show many people (including friends) love dearly, so I couldn’t not include it, but I’d never seen it, so how could I describe it? So, I went through my emails for a press release, found that same screener request email, and Raphael Bob-Waksberg had written a description about some stuff that BoJack’s going through, but the main thing that happens is Diane gets a haircut. It was perfect, and everybody needed to see it, so I put it in, and I’m going to put it in here as a quote again.

Raphael Bob-Waksberg, creator of BoJack Horseman: All right, season five of BoJackHorseman, here we go. Has it really been five seasons? Where does the time go, huh? Anyway, this season finds BoJackstarring in a new TV show called Philbert, playing a character with disturbing parallels to BoJack’s real life, echoes that force BoJack to confront himself and his past in ways large and small, but the main thing that happens this season is Diane gets a haircut. We spent a lot of time figuring out the haircut — the style, the volume, the bounce, the sheen — and we’re really proud of the way it came out. We really think people are going to like this new season, and Diane’s new haircut!

It’s just a couple of sentences, but it there’s so much happening: it teases the show without spoiling it – BoJack gets a new job that makes him examine his decisions, Diane gets a haircut – each of these won’t be the only thing that happens to these characters during the season, and they’re not the only characters in the show. What’s happening to BoJack may seem more important to viewers than Diane’s haircut – and at first you think that’s the joke – but this is an animated show, so it’s not as simple as giving an actor a haircut. The artists needed to come up with a hairstyle that worked, which then became the new design for that character – in every frame she’s on screen. Bob-Waksberg writes all of this as if it was a joke, but everything about the haircut process is probably true. It’s funny, a character confronts his emotions, and there’s a lot more happening than you think. It’s what everyone has told me is so great about BoJack Horseman, and this short description is what has convinced me to watch the show (I’ll admit that the silent episode came close), because it’s a perfect piece of writing.

Other thoughts:

I don’t usually do this for streaming guide posts, but I am today. Unfortunately highlighting BoJack meant that I didn’t have room for American Vandal, another show I haven’t watched but would probably love.

I chose the least spoiler-y still I could find on the Netflix PR site. Unless there’s some significance to lightbulbs of which I am unaware. It doesn’t matter, the season has dropped! Go and watch it.

I’ve watched half of a season of American Horror Story (Roanoke, for those of you who are interested), and it’s not necessarily my thing. If it hadn’t been for my new obsession with a paragraph of writing, I might have said more about Ryan Murphy, anthology series and what his move to Netflix means.

Currently watching: Schitt’s Creek (just finished season 3), The Great British Bake Off (series 8), probably something else I’ve forgotten.

I’ve been in Sydney – sorry, Miscellaneous Australian City – for the past week, and as expected Chris and Kristie have taken me out for some excellent meals (give or take a Korean BBQ experience that really annoyed Chris) in between their coverage of The Great Canadian Baking Show. This trip is multipurpose (which I may discuss in the future), but most of my days have been free, and they’ve been powering through it after work.

Today after an excellent yum cha we came back to our friend Gabby’s house and watched Episode 6 – Holiday Week and podcasted about it. It was fun as always, but being in the studio with them was a new experience. My only regret is that I didn’t take the chance to audition for the upcoming musical episode.

There’s so much new television! This week’s guide isn’t QUITE as long as last week’s, but there’s a lot. I’m interested to see Kidding, and was surprised to learn that Jim Carrey doesn’t have an Oscar. I love The Truman Show. There are two other shows starting on Stan this week, and I had to put in The Purge on Amazon Prime because I didn’t have space for it last week. The entire month of September could be described as ‘Here is a thing that started last week but I didn’t have room for it, so it’s here now!’ Sorry to Warriors of Liberty City.

I’ve been in Sydney this week for reasons that I may or may not talk about in the future, and staying with my friend Gabby. The entire week has been a Bake Off bonanza. One day I watched four episodes of three versions of the show, which I can safely say is too many for one day, especially since two of them were bread themed, so I couldn’t remember which show was which.

I also saw Calamity Jane at Belvoir St theatre last night, and it was wonderful. I’ll write more about that soon, because I have a lot of thoughts (including some issues I’ve always had with the script that has no bearing on this particular production). Either way, if you’re in Sydney, it’s on until the end of the month, so you should definitely see it. Until next week!